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View synonyms for

chorine

[ kawr-in, kohr-een ]

noun



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Word History and Origins

Origin of chorine1

An Americanism dating back to 1920–25; chor(us) + -ine 2
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Instead of the Broadway chorines of the original, her mermaid siblings are a multiethnic, runway-ready General Assembly.

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No one was remotely surprised when Rob Marshall’s flashily entertaining Broadway-to-Hollywood adaptation won six Oscars, including best picture and best supporting actress for Catherine Zeta-Jones, so riveting as the murderous chorine Velma Kelly.

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Nor are Fierstein’s anachronisms and vulgar jokes about sex with chorines and men in trench coats catastrophic.

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Powell sings to each chorine with affable leers, arm squeezes and a suggestive tug of his bow tie.

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We meet communists and chorines, anonymous women gazing into shop windows, the anti-lynching activist Ida B. Wells as a young woman.

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choricchorio-